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Topic: Sheyenne River


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In the News (Sat 28 Nov 09)

  
  Cheyenne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The most prominent of these ancient villages is Biesterfeldt Village, in eastern North Dakota along the Sheyenne River.
It is estimated that population of the encampment of the Cheyenne, Lakota and Arapaho along the Little Bighorn River was approximately 10,000, which would make it one of the largest gathering of Native Americans in North America in pre-reservation times.
The reservation was expanded in 1890, the current western border is the Crow Indian Reservation, and the eastern border is the Togue River.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cheyenne   (1729 words)

  
 North Dakota, Timeline of State History - SHG Resources
AD 1600 - The Cheyenne, living in earthlodges, occupied the Sheyenne River valley; the Hidatsa moved west from Devils Lake to the Missouri; the Sioux moved onto the plains from the woodlands of Minnesota.
Military occupation of North Dakota began with the establishment of Fort Abercrombie on the Red River and the present-day town of Abercrombie; the fort was abandoned in 1877.
The Northern Pacific Railway was built from the Red River to Jamestown; the NPRR reached Bismarck in 1873, but did not complete its main line to the Montana border until 1881.
www.shgresources.com /nd/timeline   (6100 words)

  
 Pheasant Hunting
4,000 acres of river bottom, dry creeks, food plots, tree rows, corn fields, tall grass fields, and cropland.
Unguided hunting, 20 miles south of Mott, North Dakota on the banks of the Cedar River.
Wing shooting on 1100 acres of great hunting terrain along the Sheyenne River for pheasant and chukar partridge from Sept. through March; bowhunting for whitetail deer and guiding for ducks and geese; combination hunting; Package of multi day hunts.
www.animalpicturesociety.com /pheasanthunting.html   (2961 words)

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